Journal des débats (Hansard) Official Report of Debates (Hansard) No. 118 N o 118. Jeudi 16 novembre Thursday 16 November 2017

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1 Legislative Assembly of Ontario Assemblée législative de l Ontario Official Report of Debates (Hansard) Journal des débats (Hansard) No. 118 N o nd Session 41 st Parliament Thursday 16 November e session 41 e législature Jeudi 16 novembre 2017 Speaker: Honourable Dave Levac Clerk: Todd Decker Président : L honorable Dave Levac Greffier : Todd Decker

2 Hansard on the Internet Hansard and other documents of the Legislative Assembly can be on your personal computer within hours after each sitting. The address is: Le Journal des débats sur Internet L adresse pour faire paraître sur votre ordinateur personnel le Journal et d autres documents de l Assemblée législative en quelques heures seulement après la séance est : Index inquiries Reference to a cumulative index of previous issues may be obtained by calling the Hansard Reporting Service indexing staff at Renseignements sur l index Adressez vos questions portant sur des numéros précédents du Journal des débats au personnel de l index, qui vous fourniront des références aux pages dans l index cumulatif, en composant le Hansard Reporting and Interpretation Services Room 500, West Wing, Legislative Building 111 Wellesley Street West, Queen s Park Toronto ON M7A 1A2 Telephone ; fax Published by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario ISSN Service du Journal des débats et d interprétation Salle 500, aile ouest, Édifice du Parlement 111, rue Wellesley ouest, Queen s Park Toronto ON M7A 1A2 Téléphone, ; télécopieur, Publié par l Assemblée législative de l Ontario

3 CONTENTS / TABLE DES MATIÈRES Thursday 16 November 2017 / Jeudi 16 novembre 2017 Member for Haliburton Kawartha Lakes Brock Hon. Michael Chan ORDERS OF THE DAY / ORDRE DU JOUR Safer Ontario Act, 2017, Bill 175, Mme Lalonde / Loi de 2017 pour plus de sécurité en Ontario, projet de loi 175, Mme Lalonde Ms. Laurie Scott Mr. Wayne Gates Hon. Marie-France Lalonde Mr. Lorne Coe Mr. Taras Natyshak Ms. Laurie Scott Second reading debate deemed adjourned INTRODUCTION OF VISITORS / PRÉSENTATION DES VISITEURS Mme France Gélinas Mr. Arthur Potts Mr. Jack MacLaren Hon. Liz Sandals Mr. Toby Barrett Hon. Glenn Thibeault Ms. Sophie Kiwala Hon. Reza Moridi Hon. Kathryn McGarry Ms. Andrea Horwath Hon. Marie-France Lalonde Hon. Yasir Naqvi Mr. Lou Rinaldi Mrs. Cristina Martins Hon. Brad Duguid Hon. Kevin Daniel Flynn The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac) ORAL QUESTIONS / QUESTIONS ORALES Minimum wage Mr. Patrick Brown Hon. Kathleen O. Wynne Home care Mr. Patrick Brown Hon. Eric Hoskins Hospital funding Ms. Andrea Horwath Hon. Kathleen O. Wynne Hon. Eric Hoskins Hospital funding Ms. Andrea Horwath Hon. Eric Hoskins Property taxation Mr. Victor Fedeli Hon. Charles Sousa Health care Ms. Catherine Fife Hon. Eric Hoskins Nurse practitioners Mr. Arthur Potts Hon. Eric Hoskins Sexual assault training Ms. Laurie Scott Hon. Yasir Naqvi Hon. Indira Naidoo-Harris Labour dispute Ms. Andrea Horwath Hon. Kathleen O. Wynne Indigenous economic development Mme Nathalie Des Rosiers Hon. David Zimmer Hon. Kathryn McGarry Hospital funding Mr. Jim Wilson Hon. Kathleen O. Wynne Hon. Eric Hoskins Labour dispute Mme France Gélinas Hon. Kevin Daniel Flynn Research and innovation Ms. Ann Hoggarth Hon. Steven Del Duca Infrastructure Ontario Ms. Sylvia Jones Hon. Bob Chiarelli Hon. Liz Sandals Visitors Ms. Teresa J. Armstrong Mme France Gélinas Hon. Kevin Daniel Flynn Mr. Gilles Bisson Hon. Eleanor McMahon

4 Notice of reasoned amendment The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac) DEFERRED VOTES / VOTES DIFFÉRÉS Time allocation Motion agreed to MEMBERS STATEMENTS / DÉCLARATIONS DES DÉPUTÉS Volunteers Mr. Jim Wilson Windsor mental health services Mrs. Lisa Gretzky Meadowvale GO station Mr. Bob Delaney Treaties Recognition Week Ms. Lisa M. Thompson Home care Ms. Sarah Campbell Semaine de reconnaissance des traités / Treaties Recognition Week Mme Nathalie Des Rosiers Ontario Junior Citizen Awards Mr. Lorne Coe Energy policies Mr. Arthur Potts Kurtis MacDermid Mr. Bill Walker Visitors Hon. Mitzie Hunter REPORTS BY COMMITTEES / RAPPORTS DES COMITÉS Standing Committee on Estimates Ms. Ann Hoggarth The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac) Report deemed received PETITIONS / PÉTITIONS Hospital funding Mr. Jim Wilson Dental care Mme France Gélinas Public transit Mr. Arthur Potts Long-term care Ms. Sylvia Jones Long-term care Mme France Gélinas Public transit Mr. Han Dong Addiction services Ms. Sylvia Jones Winter highway maintenance Mme France Gélinas Wasaga Beach Mr. Jim Wilson Anti-smoking initiatives for youth Mme France Gélinas Sewage treatment Ms. Sylvia Jones Long-term care Mme France Gélinas Organic products Ms. Sylvia Jones PRIVATE MEMBERS PUBLIC BUSINESS / AFFAIRES D INTÉRÊT PUBLIC ÉMANANT DES DÉPUTÉS Long-term care Mr. Jim Wilson Ms. Sarah Campbell Mr. John Fraser Mr. Bill Walker Ms. Teresa J. Armstrong Hon. Dipika Damerla Mr. Lorne Coe Ms. Sylvia Jones Mr. Jim Wilson Mandatory Sexual Assault Law Training for Judicial Officers Act, 2017, Bill 120, Ms. Scott / Loi de 2017 sur la formation obligatoire des fonctionnaires judiciaires en droit relatif aux agressions sexuelles, projet de loi 120, Mme Scott Ms. Laurie Scott Mrs. Lisa Gretzky Hon. Dipika Damerla Ms. Lisa MacLeod Mrs. Cristina Martins Ms. Sylvia Jones Mr. John Fraser Ms. Laurie Scott Hospital services Ms. Harinder Malhi Ms. Sylvia Jones Miss Monique Taylor Mr. Vic Dhillon Mr. Gilles Bisson Mr. John Fraser Ms. Harinder Malhi Long-term care Motion agreed to

5 Mandatory Sexual Assault Law Training for Judicial Officers Act, 2017, Bill 120, Ms. Scott / Loi de 2017 sur la formation obligatoire des fonctionnaires judiciaires en droit relatif aux agressions sexuelles, projet de loi 120, Mme Scott Second reading agreed to Hospital services Motion agreed to Tobias Enverga Jr. Mr. Raymond Sung Joon Cho ORDERS OF THE DAY / ORDRE DU JOUR Cannabis, Smoke-Free Ontario and Road Safety Statute Law Amendment Act, 2017, Bill 174, Mr. Yasir Naqvi / Loi de 2017 modifiant des lois en ce qui concerne le cannabis, l Ontario sans fumée et la sécurité routière, projet de loi 174, M. Yasir Naqvi Mr. Randy Hillier Mr. Taras Natyshak Mr. Lorenzo Berardinetti Mr. Robert Bailey Ms. Sylvia Jones Mr. Randy Hillier Mr. Taras Natyshak Mr. Lorenzo Berardinetti Mrs. Julia Munro Miss Monique Taylor Hon. Indira Naidoo-Harris Mr. Taras Natyshak Ms. Sophie Kiwala Mr. Granville Anderson Ms. Sylvia Jones

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7 6297 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO ASSEMBLÉE LÉGISLATIVE DE L ONTARIO Thursday 16 November 2017 Jeudi 16 novembre 2017 The House met at The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac): Good morning. Please join me in prayer. Prayers. MEMBER FOR HALIBURTON KAWARTHA LAKES BROCK Hon. Michael Chan: Point of order. The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac): Point of order. Hon. Michael Chan: I seek unanimous consent that the member for Haliburton Kawartha Lakes Brock be allowed to speak from her place while seated. The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac): The minister is seeking unanimous consent that the member from Haliburton Kawartha Lakes Brock be allowed to speak from her place while seated. Do we agree? Agreed. ORDERS OF THE DAY SAFER ONTARIO ACT, 2017 LOI DE 2017 POUR PLUS DE SÉCURITÉ EN ONTARIO Resuming the debate adjourned on November 15, 2017, on the motion for second reading of the following bill: Bill 175, An Act to implement measures with respect to policing, coroners and forensic laboratories and to enact, amend or repeal certain other statutes and revoke a regulation / Projet de loi 175, Loi mettant en oeuvre des mesures concernant les services policiers, les coroners et les laboratoires médico-légaux et édictant, modifiant ou abrogeant certaines autres lois et abrogeant un règlement. The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac): Further debate? The member from Haliburton Kawartha Lakes Brock, please be seated. Ms. Laurie Scott: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I was going to try to start to stand for a bit, but I may sit down if I need to, and which I probably will need to. Is that okay? The Speaker (Hon. Dave Levac): Absolutely fair. Ms. Laurie Scott: As a person who talks with their hands a lot, it s really hard when I m sitting down. Mr. Speaker, I do appreciate the opportunity to rise today at times; maybe to sit at times, too to address the government s Bill 175, An Act to implement measures with respect to policing, coroners and forensic laboratories. I want to note that it is, I believe, 417 pages. It s a very, very large bill. Yesterday we heard from the Minister of Community Safety as well as the Attorney General, in their leadoff, speak about the rationale for this legislation. We heard about how this bill supposedly modernizes policing to be able to deal with the challenges of the modern age, how it represents the biggest reform in policing in 20 years and how this legislation was five years in the making. I just want to put out the point that it has been 20 years since it has been updated; this government has been in for 14 of those years. I just think that maybe, as we re six months out from an election, with a 417-page bill, it would have been a little nicer to have it come earlier, as was promised many times. I think it was going to be before we rose in the spring session, then it was going to be when we first came back, and now we are just four weeks, really, out from rising for the winter. Having said all that, I am disappointed with the results that we have before us today. Now, there are some good things in this bill. What struck me the most is the tone it sets, though. In particular, what stood out for me is that the government seems to be telling our hard-working front-line police officers that they simply don t trust them. They don t trust them to do the jobs that they were trained for and that they put their lives on the line for. I have to say, it was quite something to watch both the ministers, in the presence of all the representatives of the Police Association of Ontario who had their lobby day yesterday here tell them with a straight face how much they appreciated their work, because I m sure that the ministers and the government on the other side know they re not really that happy, they re not really that pleased with this bill. I m sure that the ministers were personally sincere, but the real proof is in the policy, and the content of much of this government s legislation sends the exact opposite signal. It was disappointing to see how much of Bill 175 is designed to constrain and burden our police officers with additional process while at the same time reducing the scope of their activities and inviting outside organizations, including private security firms, to erode their traditional role. In the words of the Police Association of Ontario, which is the official voice and representative body for Ontario s front-line police personnel and provides representation, resource and support for 53 police associations and 18,000 police and civilian members of police services, Unfortunately, contained in this legislation are some elements that will severely undermine the

8 6298 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO 16 NOVEMBER 2017 efficient and effective provision of policing around the province. What does that tell us, Madam Speaker? This tells us that despite the government s claims to the contrary, it is absolutely clear that they did not properly consult the people affected by these changes the most: our front-line officers. I heard that from the Ontario Provincial Police Association as well as the PAO. When this bill was introduced, in the first hour after the press conference occurred, they had their own press conference and expressed extreme concerns about this bill. For our part, we know from our discussions with the police association and the OPPA the Ontario Provincial Police Association and the Toronto Police Association that they have been warning the government for months about how the proposed changes would affect their members. But we see in the content of this bill that their concerns fell on deaf ears on that side of the House. They re quite insulted. Real consultation is not telling stakeholders that changes to legislation will be introduced, asking them to submit their comments and then ignoring them. That s exactly what the Ontario Provincial Police Association, the Police Association of Ontario and the Toronto Police Association feel. Consultation means genuinely engaging with those stakeholders in a dialogue, hearing them out and trying to accommodate their concerns in the best way possible. It s especially important when those changes significantly affect an indispensable part of our society, namely our law enforcement community. These are the people who keep our province secure, keep our citizens safe and put their lives on the line. We cannot forget the importance of the police. My colleagues in the official opposition and I believe that most police officers take their oath of service very seriously and that you re never unsafe with police. That s what we want and what we want society to think. We hope that most of society thinks that. I certainly think that way. As Rob Jamieson, the president of the Ontario Provincial Police Association, put it, Ontario s police officers are mothers, fathers, sons and daughters who serve because they care about their communities and feel a duty to help make Ontario a safer place Many of the changes in this bill are simply unfair to those who put their lives on the line every day for our safety and will only further reduce their morale. When I have travelled across this province speaking to police officers, dealing with the anti-human trafficking laws that I have been trying to promote that s a very, very difficult topic. That type of horrific crime rips your heart right out of your chest. Police officers who choose to be trained in that because they re not all trained in human sex trafficking have chosen to take on extra training. They ve chosen to delve into this horrific crime because they want to rescue those poor victims and they want to put those very, very bad pimps or traffickers behind bars and remove them from society so they can t hurt any more people. They take the time, and sometimes it s months and sometimes it s years, to build up trust with that individual victim so that they feel comfortable, at whatever point in their life in that horrific game that they call it that they re in of human trafficking, to trust that police officer. That takes time. That s the real work of police officers: saving lives and protecting lives. They put their whole heart and soul in, and some have to give up lots of their own family time to do this, because they do it sometimes way beyond the hours of their duty because they are so compassionate about it. But legislation like this is taking the public distrust of police it s actually making police feel that the public don t trust them and that they are being looked at as distrustful and maybe, at some points, the bad guys. If that effect becomes very public, if this government s tone in this bill that we don t trust police officers trickles down, we re not going to save those victims. That s going to ripple out. We want a society where people are running to police because they trust them and they believe they re going to help them. This bill gives the tone to the public that the government over there doesn t trust the police to do their job. It s a very, very serious tone that is set in this bill. I truly agree with the police and the many associations I ve mentioned. They are truly upset. We should be celebrating and supporting the work of police officers in protecting our society, not denigrating it. So, Madam Speaker, I ll begin my detailed remarks by summarizing what I think are the major problems with Bill 175 and I may sit down in a minute or two. First of all, the bill would allow the outsourcing of certain police functions to private organizations, including security contractors, which carries with it significant community safety risks. The bill leaves far too much to regulation. That means details to follow for those who may be watching out there in TV land. You have enabling legislation, so you have the bulk of it, but you have the details of definitions and how things actually may work in regulations that are done not in the public discourse of the Legislature; they re done by the government with not as much public scrutiny by far. That leads to a great deal of fear: What are they going to do with that? We ve seen that with many, many bills, which leaves us with, Why aren t they telling us what they re really going to do? Why don t they put it in the legislation so we can all be clear and we can all be transparent? I m sure I ll bring that topic up a few more times as I go through the parts of the bill. The bill leaves too much to regulation and omits things that should clearly be codified in legislation, clearly explained; clearly, This is what we mean not some, We ll talk later in regulation this fuzzy, possible, Trust us. Everything is going to be okay, and we re going to listen to you sometime further down the road. That doesn t make the police associations or a lot of the public or, certainly, us in the opposition feel very comfortable with this codification in legislation by leaving it to regulation. The bill, for example, the main one, shockingly does not adequately define what the core functions of police

9 16 NOVEMBRE 2017 ASSEMBLÉE LÉGISLATIVE DE L ONTARIO 6299 officers are to be in this reality. Section 11 of the bill lists the obvious, but what they will look like in relation to what can be outsourced is a mystery. What are the core definitions of policing, and what is going to be outsourced? We want to know; the police want to know. I think, as an average citizen, I want to know who is showing up when I call 911. What is going to be outsourced? I want to feel secure. I m going to give some examples later on, but that is a very big topic that makes the public, as they get to know this bill, more nervous. It certainly feels that the police, who are specially trained and are the people who keep us safe it makes them wonder how, maybe, they are going to be dismissed in some investigations. The bill injects an unprecedented and I say unprecedented to the ministers level of ministerial discretion into policing decisions. It lays the groundwork for potential political interference in policing and disciplinary decisions, which is very problematic. The bill will make it harder for police to deal with violent criminals, since it appears to presume bad intent on their part. Finally, the bill significantly expands the bureaucracy associated with police oversight without the corresponding increase in resources and that is the big key. We all want oversight. You can say it, as Liberal government is very good at saying things, but they never actually put the increase in resources for it to be done properly. And then where do they get taken from? Probably the front lines. These are all major and really inexcusable flaws. I ll now go through the legislation, schedule by schedule. Sorry, but you gave me a 417-page bill. I won t get it all in in an hour, Madam Speaker, but they re just inexcusable flaws, and we need to address them. Schedule 1, the Police Services Act: The main change proposed by the Police Services Act is to allow police service boards and municipalities to enter into agreements with non-profit, and some for-profit, entities to provide some policing functions. This would open the door to the outsourcing of police duties to organizations like private security companies. While the government argues that this is an efficiency measure and that it would free police officers from having to watch trucks come and go from construction sites, as the community safety minister put it during her press conference, the risk of unintended circumstances are actually much more serious than they let on. Consider this straightforward example: In the event of a terror threat at a public event like there was at the Boston Marathon would we want private contractors responding or would we want fully trained and qualified police officers responding? This is a very real public safety question that we could soon be facing if this bill becomes law. Could we really expect the same level of service to the public in such an emergency situation, given the disparities in training between full-time police officers and private contractors? Most Ontarians would say no, and the Police Association of Ontario has some convincing polling that shows this. Here is another example: What if a police service board decides to outsource crime scene investigations to a private contractor? Can we really be confident that they will carry out this function to the same standards that we have come to expect from our professional police officers? The reality is that the gaping holes in this legislation could allow for more situations like these to happen. The most glaring problem is that the bill fails to spell out the core functions of police officers. As I described before, that is a big, gaping hole. How can we move forward with a bill that does not provide clear guidance to police officers, police service boards or municipalities on what the parameters of policing are? If the answer is that the government will more clearly and precisely define the core functions of policing through regulations once this bill is passed, then they are showing us how little they respect the legislative process and this Legislature. Or, if the answer is that the government will be making these decisions on a case-by-case basis, how do they expect to guarantee a level playing field and consistency across the board? 0920 There is simply no reason that we shouldn t be fully defining these responsibilities in this piece of legislation, especially since the government claims to have been working on it for such a long time. Why not be more transparent and include it in the legislation? Is this government simply lazy, or is this maybe a sign of some kind of hidden agenda? Do they want to reserve the right to define what policing is for themselves by way of regulations that they will draft without our legislative scrutiny? Do they want to blindside our already demoralized frontline police officers even further? The government hasn t told us, but I can assure this House that I will be asking these questions until we get some answers that actually make sense. Getting back to the bill itself, a key element of the government s modernization of policing is moving towards a community policing model. As part of this new approach, municipalities will be required to develop a community policing plan and to ensure that police service boards are representative of the population in their area. I want to say that the community policing model has the potential to be effective. I have seen the coordinated approaches undertaken independently by several communities across Ontario to address human sex trafficking by bringing together a broad range of community organizations, victim service providers and police officers. This kind of approach can help to strengthen the co-operation between our police officers and our communities. I ve seen it most recently in my municipality of Kawartha Lakes, which has been outstanding in coordinating with their municipal police force, their OPP police forces and having the community service providers, educators, the children s aid we see everyone at the table. Peel region has done it; Halton region; Ottawa has done it. It has been replicated. They have been doing this of their

10 6300 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO 16 NOVEMBER 2017 own initiative. I certainly appreciate the effectiveness that can occur when that happens. I know the approach many police officers actively engage in and support, especially in smaller communities across the province. However, the stark contrast with the government s approach of leaving the core duties of police officers mostly undefined I m going to say this many times they put very specific timelines for these community policing plans to be submitted to the ministry and implemented I believe it s two years but timelines that could lead to sanctions if they are not followed. That is a significant amount of pressure to put on Ontario communities, and that s what we have been hearing. They specifically said it s two years to do that, yet they leave out the definition of core duties of police officers. So why is it that the government can define binding timelines for municipalities to generate community policing reports and diversity plans, but it can t define the core functions of policing? Fair question. Also, how will this work for big cities as opposed to smaller communities? It looks like timelines will be the same for either. Is that fair? What is the government s plan for rolling this process out? We don t know yet. We also see that this bill would prescribe training with respect to human rights and systemic racism for all police officers. That s certainly a worthwhile measure, but I have to say it s more than a little ironic that the government is willing to prescribe training for police officers, but it s not willing to mandate sexual assault training for judges and justices of the peace. I m sure you ll hear a little bit more about that this afternoon, as I debate my private member s bill. In any case, these training requirements expose yet another flaw in this government s bill. The additional sensitivity training and restrictions mandated by Bill 175 would not apply to the private security contractors that could now be hired to carry out policing functions we re just not sure what the functions are and I would argue that that is a pretty huge double standard that could, again, lead to unequal outcomes. Once again, the bill is unclear about how that gap would be managed. But it seems again to show that the government is singling out police officers and presuming bad intent on their part. Think about it: The government is basically giving police additional responsibilities and guidelines, but at the same time saying their roles could potentially be subcontracted to private security contractors that are not held to the same standard a very good point to be brought up. My fear is only made worse by the way the government keeps piling on the administrative layers as we keep going deeper into the bill. This bill would establish Ontario Provincial Police detachment boards to establish local policies and action plans that represent yet another layer of authority that will add to the cost and complexity. And complexity is the key word when we begin to consider the police oversight component of Bill 175. First of all, the bill changes the names of the existing oversight bodies and expands their responsibilities. I m going to get into a lot of acronyms that will be familiar to some and not to others. The Ontario Independent Police Review Director becomes the Ontario Policing Complaints Agency so OIPRD now becomes OPCA the complaints director being tasked with reviewing every single complaint submitted by the public. That s going to be a lot of work. The Ontario Civilian Police Commission, OCPC, becomes the Ontario Policing Discipline Tribunal. The Special Investigations Unit, the SIU, becomes the Ontario Special Investigations Unit. Aside from these changes, which were mostly made to clarify the responsibilities of these institutions, Bill 175 also adds a fourth layer of oversight, the Inspector General of Policing, on top of that. I said it was a very thick bill. That s certainly a new oversight role. This new position of the Inspector General of Policing will have significant powers to monitor compliance with the act. The Inspector General of Policing will be able to appoint inspectors or initiate inspections and require the presentation of information on request. The inspector will also have the power to recommend that the minister use a disciplinary power. The inspector the IGP and now the OSIU will also be able to potentially fine police officers up to $50,000 or to imprisonment of a term of not more than one year, if they don t comply with its directions. It s a significant amount of power and it adds even more complexity to the police oversight process. There is legitimate concern that this additional layer of police oversight will only make the current environment more difficult. I d like to quote the Postmedia editorial from last week which addresses an essential problem that this government needs to address. When former Ontario ombudsman André Marin reviewed the SIU in 2011 Interjections. Ms. Laurie Scott: Now you re waking up he concluded senior officials in Ontario s Ministry of the Attorney General one of the two ministries responsible for implementing this new legislation actively undermined the SIU. Interjections. The Deputy Speaker (Ms. Soo Wong): Order. Ms. Laurie Scott: It s a good thing it s in Hansard, Madam Speaker, so they can see later. Since the Liberals were in charge then, as they are now, what assurances does the public have the same failings won t be repeated? We re also skeptical of the Liberals proposal to create a new Inspector General, ostensibly to review complaints against police boards and chiefs, but which sounds to us like a patronage position Once again, because of the lack of clarity in the bill I m asking for clarity, giving you a chance there are open questions that need to be addressed by the government. Creating sweeping new powers and authorities is a serious matter, but the government does not seem to treat it with the care that it deserves. For example, the bill states that the minister may issue authorizations to

11 16 NOVEMBRE 2017 ASSEMBLÉE LÉGISLATIVE DE L ONTARIO 6301 employ special constables and that the minister may request information from policing entities such as the useof-force data or race-based data. In what circumstances can they ask for that? It s just not clear. The bill also gives new powers to chiefs, police services boards or the minister to impose disciplinary measures on police officers, including suspensions. So although police officers may request a hearing before a tribunal to appeal this kind of disciplinary measure, the fact that the minister has the authority to unilaterally impose disciplinary measures will have a chilling effect and can lead to the possibility of politically motivated decisions being made in the future, whether due to public pressure or political considerations. It s unprecedented, the minister s power Interjection. Ms. Laurie Scott: Well, she will have her time to speak. So we think that s wrong, and it really worries me. Why does the minister need such broad authority? Are we once again to trust them to develop the right kind of regulations to restrict and confine that authority? This is definitely the most problematic aspect of the government s legislation, because the government has decided to allow for an unprecedented level of ministerial discretion and authority across a wide range of areas relating to police oversight. Once again, the message is clear: The government does not trust the police, and reserves the right to engage in political interference in policing oversight, if it suits them. This gives the minister way too much influence over the overall process. But even when the government gets something somewhat right in this bill, they don t reach the best outcome. On the one hand, it s good to see the government take a relatively balanced approach on suspension without pay for police officers who commit serious off-duty crimes. I know that this has been something that the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police was advocating for. But in the very next breath, the government fails to define what it considers a serious crime. Again, that s irresponsible because it leaves it too open-ended say what you mean. Michael McCormack, the president of the Toronto Police Association, said that the province needs a clear definition of a serious crime outside of duty. It doesn t give the chiefs a sweeping power to suspend without pay at all. He also adds that he is concerned that the government plans to pass the legislation in the five weeks before the Christmas break. That was brought up when the government introduced the bill to the media. So why can t the government define what a serious crime is? Why the smokescreen? Their failure to clearly define core police roles in legislation and now the failure to define what constitutes a serious crime will only cause further confusion among police officers. I just can t understand the government s rationale for these decisions. Going further, Bill 175 states that the Special Investigations Unit director may investigate incidents involving a police officer, even if off-duty, in which a person dies, is seriously injured or in which a firearm is discharged. Significantly, this power will extend to reviewing incidents that occurred in the past. This will, again, be very resource-intensive. I know some police officers have been concerned about the retroactive nature of this. Then we come to the government s implementation of Justice Tulloch s recommendations. When Justice Tulloch released his report, the Report of the Independent Police Oversight Review, last April, he made over 100 recommendations, almost all of which the government has said it will adopt. At this point, I d like to read into the record the Police Association of Ontario s submission in this regard. It s a powerful statement of what the police think of the changes proposed in the government s bill. It reads as follows: Since Attorney General Naqvi named Justice Michael H. Tulloch to conduct a review of Ontario s police oversight bodies, the Police Association of Ontario has been working diligently to ensure that the final product of the various consultations and analysis was in the best interests of all Ontarians. Under the proposed act, Ontario s oversight bodies would grow to a level out of step with public expectations of police oversight beyond the practical ability of oversight agencies to do their work and the municipal and provincial budgets available for policing in Ontario generally. As drafted, this act would ensure poorer results for all interested parties. From our observation and experience it appears the oversight issue has snowballed beyond expectations since the public protests that gave rise to the appointment of Justice Tulloch. At that time, public and policing stakeholders were united in their view there were elements of the oversight system that required a review to ensure the process works for all Ontarians. We all agree. Unfortunately, while Justice Tulloch approached his work diligently, he took an extremely expansive view of his mandate, leaving not enough time and resources to tightly focus on the issues of reporting and efficiency that he was tasked to specifically examine. As a result, some of his recommendations lack evidentiary underpinning while others appear to be crafted to appease certain stakeholders. Instead of adopting his perspective wholesale, the legislation that is now flowing from that report should have been crafted with an appropriate balance between deference to his work and critical thinking. The legislation appears to presume there is a crisis in policing and oversight in Ontario that must be corrected... Police are among the most trusted public institutions in Canada and, as reported in their respective annual reports, the vast majority of oversight investigations lead to no charges in the cases in the SIU and lead to no finding of fault in the case of the OIPRD (Ontario s public complaints body). So when they give the illusion that there was a crisis in policing, we think that that is quite a distance from the truth. Hon. Michael Coteau: Hear that? Ms. Laurie Scott: Contrary to sensationalized media coverage, evidence suggests

12 6302 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO 16 NOVEMBER 2017 Interjection. Ms. Laurie Scott: I m reporting the evidence of the report for the most part, the oversight process is working despite the need changes, for sure for optimization in some areas such as reporting and efficiency. We are extremely troubled with some of the practical problems that will arise if the act is tabled as drafted. Both the SIU and OIPRD will quickly become overwhelmed with investigating matters and individuals the public expects would be investigated by local or provincial police. The result will be an inability to focus resources on those matters where there is a true public interest in an independent civilian reviewing of events. The public trust will only be harmed by such an unchecked expansion. We also have concerns with the incredible amount of scarce public resources that will need to be allocated to make the act a reality. In our estimation, both the OIPRD and SIU will expand their caseloads by at least a factor of 10. The majority of this expansion will take away from the duties of the oversight agencies which were created to ensure transparency, accountability and fairness in a timely manner for all affected parties. This is a crucial point. Even setting aside all of the concerns that I ve already mentioned about how the government s approach unfairly targets the important work done by our police officers, the government doesn t even have a plan for how it will implement any of these massive changes. Their answer is, no doubt, that it will be in regulations, but it is very important, with the new oversight, that they have the resources they need to do the oversight For example, the Ontario Provincial Police Association s president and CEO, Rob Jamieson, welcomed Justice Tulloch s initial recommendations that the SIU conclude investigations in 120 days where possible: Putting timelines on that I think is good for the public, but it s also very good for our police officers, who in some cases are waiting up to 15 months to find out whether or not they re going to be charged criminally or not, he said. To us, that s just unacceptable. That s a quote from Rob Jamieson from the Ontario Provincial Police Association. With the government saying it will follow all of Justice Tulloch s recommendations, I m looking at things like this commitment to conclude SIU investigations in 120 days, and I can t see how the government is actually going to pay for it. The intentions are not enough. You hear that they want oversight and they want accountability, but when it can drag on for 15 months, that s just not fair to the police and it s not fair to the community that they are serving that these cases drag out for such extensive lengths of time. I think the Ottawa Sun editorial from a couple of weeks ago titled Liberals Show Us the Money on Police Reforms sums this up best. It says: The Office of the Independent Police Review Director, which currently receives public complaints, got more than 1,000 complaints about police officer conduct in It investigated 150 of them. The rest were sent back to police services to investigate. When the OIPRD becomes the new Ontario Policing Complaints Agency, the sole agency responsible for investigating public complaints, its workload is going to go up. How is it going to manage this huge caseload? Again, a very fair question an absolutely critical question, and this government has no answer. How can we trust them to commit the resources that will be needed? I appreciate that we re going to be having some more debates about this, and maybe when we can get into committee we can find out some more details, but it is a very legitimate question. There needed to be a change in the oversight; we agree, but where is the money? Justice Tulloch s report and some of the people who worked on it agree that it needs to come with resources. We ve seen the government already fail to reinvest in the integrated guns and gangs task force, even though there has been a 58% increase in gun-related homicides in the city of Toronto in the past year alone. Coming back to the Police Association of Ontario submission: The corresponding budget required to properly equip these agencies with needed staff and resources in order for them to conduct investigations that the public would never expect them to conduct would be an unwise and structural drain on the public purse. To bring in such an expensive system at a time when municipalities are seeking to support legislation that will allow them to take resources out of policing would be unseemly. Hiving off valuable budget space that could be spent on the true issues present in policing such as interactions with vulnerable individuals and a better mental health support system is a poor use of precious resources. Going back to oversight that oversight changes were needed: If the government doesn t give them resources, is that going to affect what services they can provide on the front line? We know of the incredible increase of mental health situations that the police encounter: Usually over 30% of the calls are mental health-related in northern Ontario. I know that almost doubles on their police calls; that s just our society that we live in. We have to do a better job. The police are on the front line of mental health crises, and those calls are just incredible, when those numbers come out over 30% of the calls are mental health-related, and in some areas of the province even more. We would encourage all MPPs to closely examine the proposed act. The PAO has been consistent in our message that practical, robust oversight enhances the public trust in policing and leads to improved outcomes across the policing spectrum. However, oversight run amok and driven by political considerations is in no one s best interests. An oversight system that is fair to both affected persons and professional police is our shared goal; unfortunately, the act, as drafted, will lead to negative outcomes for individuals on both sides of the issues

13 16 NOVEMBRE 2017 ASSEMBLÉE LÉGISLATIVE DE L ONTARIO 6303 and a continued erosion of public confidence of policing oversight in Ontario. Mr. Speaker, what a profound condemnation of the major flaws in the government s legislation. It really speaks for itself. The government has had this submission for months now, so we can safely say that the government simply ignored these concerns and plowed ahead. Schedule 6, the Coroners Act the final three sections of Bill 175, on updating the functions of coroners, the Missing Persons Act and Forensic Laboratories Act. The revisions to the Coroners Act are significant. On the one hand, we will now see the chief coroner appointing coroners, not the LG in Council. That is a positive change that will probably provide an improved efficiency in the appointment of coroners and remove political considerations from appointments. However, we also see some potentially problematic changes. One of them would allow the coroner to hold an inquest even in a case is where a police officer s use of force was not a direct contributor to the death and requiring that the coroner must provide written reasons if the coroner decides not to hold an inquest. This is problematic both from the perspective of the coroner and the police officer. For the officer, it would mean that, even if an off-duty police officer stopped to pull someone out of a burning car who then dies, or if someone has a fatal heart attack in the back of the police car, that officer would automatically be suspended pending a coroner s inquest. Do we really want our police officers to think twice about helping someone who is dying on the street for fear of being suspended from work? I know I don t. That is not only unreasonable, but it will also put impossible pressure on coroners to investigate the additional cases that will inevitably result. This is work that they aren t yet properly resourced for. Just think about the effect on morale of both police officers and coroners. Speaking of morale, one element of the legislation says that anything seized by a coroner for the purpose of an investigation must be kept safe and secure but not necessarily with the police. What kind of signal does that send? It seems to imply that police should be automatically suspected of being evidence tamperers. How else can you look at that? I hope that wasn t the government s intent, but that s certainly the intent that is given as it sits now. Schedule 7 is moving on the establishment of a Missing Persons Act. That is something that is long overdue. The measures contained in this bill will allow officers to apply for an order for the production of records, such as telephone and banking records, to assist in locating a missing person or to apply for a search warrant to facilitate the search for a missing person. It s very important let me tell you how important this is. In my work on the human sex-trafficking file over the past several years, I ve heard countless stories of missing girls who have been forced into this modern-day form of slavery. There has been some amazing work done by community organizations, as well as both private and public sector organizations to help track these criminals to rescue the girls that have been sold for sex. With the Missing Persons Act, police are allowed to do more investigations. It s shocking that that didn t exist before. This is one of the parts of the bill that is long overdue in coming. We have been trying to push for more attention I m trying to watch my time and get all these points in here, but one of the most amazing examples is Project Protect, which is the partnership between the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FinTRAC), financial institutions and law enforcement that is using money trails to detect and investigate traffickers. Banks anti-money-laundering arms are starting to red-flag suspicious accounts, based on indicators such as multiple motel bookings, large expenditures at drugstores, ATM activity and credit card activity. They report suspicious activity to FinTRAC, which in turn notifies law enforcement. In the year since it was launched, they made 102 disclosures to police across Canada under that Project Protect label, and that, again, back to a human trafficking survivor training the financial institutions that we have in our country and them taking up the gauntlet and creating indicators that can flag activity. When I went to a presentation that they did, they were so proud of the work they had done and the fact that because of that, they were not only helping make arrests for human trafficking and rescuing victims; they were actually finding missing persons. That shocked them because, of course, when you get into this, you don t know exactly what you may uncover. That was an incredible initiative, and I m very proud of them for doing that. They are so thrilled at the impact that they are making. You see the effect, and this kind of initiative underscores how important data is to our police. Providing those tools to our police officers is much needed and long overdue. I m glad to see this finally happening. It brings us back to the resourcing issue, as always. Having tools is not the same thing as being resourced properly to carry out the work. On the Forensic Laboratories Act, we have something that makes sense: Requiring mandatory accreditation for those carrying out laboratory tests for the purpose of legal proceedings is certainly a no-brainer, as is establishing an advisory committee to provide technical advice and expertise to the minister. Again, this is long overdue and will help to restore trust in the justice system, which was somewhat shaken in recent years with stories of unaccredited forensic laboratories providing false or misleading advice to the courts that led to wrongful convictions or the release of violent criminals. Madam Speaker, that about sums up the content of the legislation at hand. I want to talk a bit about what s not in the legislation because there are some glaring omissions in the time I have left. I m sure it has been long enough for a lot of you. One of the main issues that prompted the Police Services Act review in the first place was the growing public concern about fatal police shootings involving people who are mentally ill. Coming back to the Postmedia

14 6304 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO 16 NOVEMBER 2017 editorial I mentioned earlier, But this proposed law does not address the fact that the major cause of these tragedies in most cases, as numerous inquests have revealed, is not police wrongdoing, but the lack of mental health services for people in crisis. As retired Supreme Court judge Frank Iacobucci concluded in his exhaustive review of Toronto police use-offorce guidelines in 2014: The effective functioning of the mental health system is essential as a means of preventing people from finding themselves in crisis in the first place. There will not be great improvements in police encounters with people in crisis without the participation of... municipal, provincial and federal governments because... they are part of the problem and need to be involved in the solution. I say to the government: When is the Wynne government going to step up on that issue? I have been speaking about it practically my whole time here. It has just escalated since then. That s yet another good question for the government that remains unanswered. Everything seems to be one of the stretch goals that they have with them. Once again, we see so much focus from this government on this bill on police responsibility without addressing some of the core issues that have been presented, such as a challenge to community safety like mental health. There s also another thing that police have been calling on the government to implement for years, and this bill would have been the perfect opportunity to do it. I m speaking about updating the Mandatory Blood Testing Act to protect first responders. Currently, when a first responder ingests bodily fluid from an individual in the line of duty for example, blood enters their mouths during CPR they can seek a warrant under the Mandatory Blood Testing Act to have the affected individual s blood tested for infectious diseases if the individual chooses not to give a sample voluntarily. While waiting for the results or the warrant, the impacted first responder must either take anti-hiv medication, which can be toxic to them, or wait until they get the results before taking medication, which means they risk infection. I know my nursing stuff comes out a little bit here, but it s a very simple request. Various police associations have raised concerns with the timelines for retrieval of a blood sample under the act, which oversees the warrant process, and that there is no process for testing the blood of deceased people or out-of-province people or people without a fixed address or ID. There are no real enforcement penalties for non-compliance with the act or even the warrant. It s a real concern affecting our front-line police officers. It s something the government has been aware of for years but has done nothing to address. This legislation would have been a perfect opportunity to introduce such a change. Why is it still missing? I can tell you why. The government simply refuses to listen to our police officers: another example of their failure to approach consultation in a real and meaningful way. So, Madam Speaker, as I begin to close my remarks in the last few minutes, I wanted to reiterate my concerns with regard to the legislation as a whole. First of all, the bill will allow the outsourcing of certain police functions to private organizations including security contracts, which carries with it significant community safety risks. The bill leaves far too much to regulation. It omits things that should certainly be codified in legislation. For example, the bill shockingly does not define what the core functions of police officers will be. The bill injects an unprecedented level of ministerial discretion into policing decisions. It lays the groundwork for potential political interference in policing and disciplinary decisions, which is extremely troubling. The bill will make it harder for police to deal with violent criminals since it appears to presume bad intent on the part of the police. Finally, the bill significantly expands the bureaucracy associated with police oversight without a corresponding increase in resources. I fully support the idea of modernizing policing for the 21st century. I m a supporter of greater transparency. The government s legislation doesn t deliver on either in a way that we can be confident will work. Instead of modernizing policing, Bill 175 adds so many new bureaucratic structures and hurdles that will only make policing more difficult for our front-line officers. Instead of greater transparency, Bill 175 gives us a lack of clarity, open-ended definitions of key terms, and a massive increase in ministerial authority and discretion the risk of politicization of policing. Those concerns have been loud and clear from the Ontario Provincial Police Association; the Police Association of Ontario, which represents our municipal police forces; and the Toronto Police Association. Those things have to be taken seriously. They were not consulted to the degree that they thought they were going to be consulted before the final bill was brought forward. The government could have done a better job at working out some of the things that I have highlighted that are of great concern and that undermine the trust that the government has in the policing that goes on in the province of Ontario not something a government, I believe, would want to do The bill will ultimately drive up costs and increase burdens. Most of the changes put forward in this bill will require significant resources to implement, which the government did not address in their press conference or in their fall economic statement that we just had this week. If this bill took so long in the creation the minister says it was five years then I would think that the consultation I think the majority of the heads of the police associations that I have been speaking about today have been there for a while. It s not like they are just new to their jobs. They have certainly been with those associations and been representing their front-line police officers for a long time. This would maybe have been a little bit more effective legislation than we see before us.

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